NEW YORK, Oct 30 (Reuters) - The second-largest refinery on
the U.S. East Coast suffered some flooding and a power outage
from Hurricane Sandy, and two smaller plants also lost power, as
glitches threatened to slow the recovery in fuel supplies
disrupted by the massive storm.

While the region's biggest plant, in Philadelphia, and
several others were ramping up operations after escaping damage,
other facilities, pipelines and terminals were struggling to
restore the flow of supplies that had slowed to a trickle.

Phillips 66 said there was "some flooding in
low-lying areas" of its 238,000 barrel-per-day Bayway, New
Jersey, plant, which was shut on Monday as a precaution. The
plant remains closed, the company said, and utility PSE&G said
power was likely to be restored no sooner than in 24 to 48
hours.
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